Text Only
Search

Return To Forever Returns to New Generation of Fans


15 August 2008
Levine report - Download (MP3) audio clip
Levine report - Listen (MP3) audio clip

The groundbreaking jazz-fusion group Return To Forever enjoyed its greatest commercial success between 1973 and 1976. These are the years critics and fans call "classic" Return To Forever, with founder Chick Corea front and center on piano and keyboards. As VOA's Doug Levine tells us, Return To Forever has returned, capturing a new generation of fans with an anthology and reunion tour.

Return to Forever
Return to Forever Anthology
It's just like 1973 all over again, only this time Return To Forever's "After The Cosmic Rain" is playing on a CD player rather than an 8-track tape machine - an audio tape player popular in the late-1960s and early-1970s. Today, a ticket to a Return To Forever concert is probably five times what it cost 35 years ago.

The 1970s were marked by the comings and goings of influential jazz-fusion acts, such as The Mahavishnu Orchestra, Weather Report, Herbie Hancock and Miles Davis.

For Return To Forever, change came in 1973. Vocals heard on the group's previous two albums were dropped, synthesizers added, and band members replaced. Drummer Lenny White and guitarist Bill Connors were hired to compliment Chick Corea's nimble keyboard playing and Stanley Clarke's wizardry on the bass. But, Connors tenure lasted only one album as 19-year-old guitar virtuoso Al Di Meola came onboard for Return To Forever's next release, Where Have I Known You Before.

Return To Forever and the jazz-fusion movement was at its peak in 1975. That year, the group delivered a Grammy Award-winning performance with the album No Mystery.  

One more release followed before Chick Corea changed his lineup again, enlisting the services of a four-piece horn section and his wife Gayle to sing vocals. Missing on the group's final album were Lenny White and Al Di Meola.

Selections from Return To Forever's new anthology cover four different albums from the group's "classic" period. In support of the two-disc collection, Chick Corea, Stanley Clarke, Lenny White and Al Di Meola have reunited for a tour of Europe and the U.S., dividing their 90 minutes on stage between acoustic and electric sets.
 

emailme.gif E-mail This Article
printerfriendly.gif Print Version

  Related Stories
Jazzman David Sanborn Returns to the Blues on 'Here And Gone'
Gerald Albright Pays Tribute to Memphis on 'Sax For Stax'
Steve Tyrell Goes 'Back To Bacharach'
Jazz Bassist Gerald Veasley's Patience Pays Off
 
  Top Story
Obama Names Campaign Rival Hillary Clinton as His Secretary of State  Audio Clip Available  Video clip available

  More Stories
Explosions Rock Baghdad and Mosul  Audio Clip Available
Mumbai Terror Attacks Heighten Tensions Between India, Pakistan  Audio Clip Available
Suicide Bomber Strikes in Pakistan
Suicide Bombing Kills 10 in Afghanistan
Israel Turns Back Libyan Ship Carrying Aid Supplies to Gaza
Zimbabwe's Cholera Epidemic Hits Home  Audio Clip Available
International Climate Change Forum Opens in Poland
Thai Anti-Government Protesters Focus on Airports  Audio Clip Available
SE Asian Nations Watching US Plans for Auto Industry  Audio Clip Available
S. Korea Expresses 'Deep Regret' About North's Border Clampdown  Audio Clip Available
Controversial Movie on Ataturk Stokes Debate in Turkey  Audio Clip Available
Effort in Senegal to Join Traditional & Conventional Medicine  Video clip available
Presidential Transition Process is Civil, Complex  Video clip available
UN Climate Chief Warns Against 'Cheap and Dirty' Power